WWF: Mekong Dams Threaten Rare Giant Catfish; 'The Clock Is Ticking' 
KN Source: Underwatertimes 7/27/2010
WWF: Mekong Dams Threaten Rare Giant Catfish; 'The Clock Is Ticking'
Wild populations of the iconic Mekong giant catfish will be driven to extinction if hydropower dams planned for the Mekong River go ahead, says a new report by World Wildlife Fund (WWF).

The report, River of Giants: Giant Fish of the Mekong, profiles four giant fish living in the Mekong that rank within the top 10 largest freshwater fish on the planet. At half the length of a bus and weighing up to 1,322 pounds, the Mekong River's Giant freshwater stingray is the world's largest freshwater fish. The critically endangered Mekong giant catfish ranks third at almost 10 feet in length and 771 pounds.

The hydropower dam planned on the Mekong River at Sayabouly Province, northern Laos, is a threat to the survival of the wild population of Mekong giant catfish. The Sayabouly dam is the first lower Mekong River mainstream dam to enter a critical stage of assessment before construction is approved by the Mekong River Commission, which includes representatives from Cambodia, Laos, Thailand and Vietnam.
 

"A fish the size of a Mekong giant catfish cannot swim across a large barrier like the Sayabouly dam to reach its spawning grounds upstream," said Dekila Chungyalpa, Director of WWF's Greater Mekong Program. "Building this and other dams will lead to the collapse of the wild population of this iconic species."

Current scientific information suggests the Mekong giant catfish migrate from the Tonle Sap Lake in Cambodia up the Mekong River to spawn in northern Thailand and Laos. Any dam built on the lower Mekong River mainstream will block this migration route.

The other Mekong giant fish featured in the report are the dog-eating catfish, named because it has been caught using dog meat as bait, and the giant barb, the national fish of Cambodia and largest barb in the world. At 661 pounds each, these fish tie for fifth place on the global top ten.

The impacts of lower Mekong River mainstream dams are not restricted to these Mekong giants; they would also exacerbate the impacts of climate change on the Mekong River Delta, one of the world's most productive regions for fisheries and agriculture.

Building the Sayabouly dam would reduce sediment flowing downstream to the Mekong River Delta, increasing the vulnerability of this area to the impacts of climate change like sea level rise.

''The Lower Mekong is currently free-flowing but the clock is ticking,'' Chungyalpa said. "We have a rare opportunity to conserve these freshwater giants and ensure the livelihoods of millions of people who live along the Mekong mainstream."

WWF supports a delay in the approval of the mainstream dams, including the Sayabouly dam, to ensure a comprehensive understanding of all the positive and negative impacts of their construction and operation.

To meet immediate energy demands, WWF promotes sustainable hydropower projects on tributaries of the Mekong River, prioritizing those that already have hydropower dams developed on them.

 
Dog-eating catfish Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
176Thailand waters invaded by alien fish from Africawionews2024-07-14TN
177New England fishermen sentenced in complex herring fraud caseThe Associated Press2024-07-15US
1787-year-old reels in record-breaking catfish at Mississippi lakesupertalk2024-07-15US
179Upstate NY fisherman breaks record for species considered a living dinosaurRochester Democrat and Chronicle2024-07-15US
180Return of Kiwi super-trawler sparks concerns for orange roughy populationPulse Tasmania2024-07-17AU
181Mild winter trims ice fishing pressure on Lake of the Woodsechopress2024-08-02US
182How Yemenis catch fish with scrap reefs using plastic and tiresinterestingengineering2024-07-19YE
183Largemouth bass now known as Florida bassFox News2024-07-19US
184How fly-fishing helped this woman overcome lifes toughest challengesCBC News2024-07-21CA
185Dozens show up to eat notorious deep water fish caught off Outer Banksnewsobserver2024-07-18US
186Researchers find dozens of microplastics in Lake Ontario fish caught near Torontothestar2024-07-17CA
187In the cod collapses wake, redfish risenational observer2024-08-01CA
188US Promises $240 Million to Improve Fish HatcheriesAssociated Press2024-07-25US
189Why small tilapia have a big future in African aquaculturethefishsite2024-07-31RW
190Angler arrested after catching 14 oversized fishFox News2024-07-30US
191Learn to fish with these fishing essentialsFox News2024-08-01US
192Rio Grande fish dodge endangered list but could still lose third of populationThe Colorado Sun2024-07-08US
193Global migratory freshwater fish populations plummet by 81%mongabay2024-07-08US
194Dead fish at Lake San Antonio doesnt deter weekend crowdsksbw2024-07-08US
195White sturgeon fish moves closer to endangered statusBay City News Service2024-07-09US
196Nebraska fisherman reels in new fish species in state: Bright orange with turquoiseFox News2024-07-27US
197Predatory snakehead fish should not be released back into South Carolina watersFox News2024-07-20US
198Fishing for Catfish in Georgiaeinnews2024-07-22US
199100% Fish movement gathering momentum, with projects underway in Alaska, Canada, and the Pacificseafood source2024-07-22CA
200U.S. fisheries could be devastated by Supreme Courts ending the Chevron doctrinetampabay2024-07-11US

214 215 216 7 of [217 - pages.]